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Showing posts with label Weekly Geeks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weekly Geeks. Show all posts

Weekly Geeks 2010-6: Romancing the Tome

I haven't done a Weekly Geeks post for quite awhile! This week's topic is romantic literature - in honor of Valentine's Day, of course.

I have to give this one a lot of thought, as romance isn't high on my list of topics I enjoy or pursue in novels. In fact, a forced romantic link can often ruin a story for me. But romance done well is often delightful.

Out of several possible WG prompts, I decided to answer just one: "Do you have a favorite romantic scene in a book?"

One of the most sensuous scenes I've ever read was in Crescent by Diana Abu Jaber. Sirine works in her father's restaurant; Han frequents the restaurant, and soon the sparks begin to fly. This scene takes place while they're having a conversation about Han returning to his homeland of Iraq:
There’s time for baklava if they make it together.


And while Sirine has never known how to dance, always stiffening and trying to lead while her partner murmurs relax, relax – and while there are very few people who know how to cook and move with her in the kitchen – it seems that she and Han know how to make baklava together. She’s startled to find that she seems to feel his presence in her shoulders, running through her arms and wrists, into her hands. Her senses feel bunched together like fingers around a bouquet, her skin sensitive to the touch. She feels light-headed. She watches the fluid movement in his legs, arms, and neck, the dark fringe of his eyes. He transports the sheets and she sweeps the pastry brush, losing herself in the rocking movement. She takes in the powerful curve of his neck and shoulders; his skin is silkily brown. There’s just a touch of insomnia in his eyes, an inward, solitary air.


He smoothes another sheet. Sirine butters it, then pours a thick filling of ground walnuts, sugar, and spices over the layers. She strokes her palm over the top to level it.


"My mother told me that if I knew how to make good baklava I would be irresistible to any woman,” he says.
“Ah, so she taught you how to make baklava,” Sirine observes.
“No. So she refused to teach me.”
Sirine laughs. “But somehow you learned how to make it anyway. Lucky for me.”
“Actually, I’m learning how right this second.”
Another layer. Butter. She glances at him, then back at the baklava.


Distracted, she lowers the brush and accidentally swipes his fingers with butter. She blushes and quickly wipes his hand off with her apron. “Oh, I’m so sorry,” she says.

His hand is warm and his fingers fumble through hers. “You may butter my fingers anytime,” he says, then coughs and looks abashed.

Ooo la la. Butter me some baklava! Food and eating lend themselves well to romantic and/or sensuous scenes (who can forget the fruit eating scene in Tom Jones?).

One thing that gets under my skin (and not in a good way!) is the use of "afterward" as a euphemism for "they had sex." I come across this more often than I think I should in good contemporary literature. He woos her; she responds; they flirt; they touch; they kiss; AFTERWARD they go see a movie. Why not just say "yada yada yada?" It's just as creative.

Have a wonderful Valentine's Day - and Happy Asian New Year, the Year of the Tiger!
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Weekly Geeks 2009-42: Podcasts?


I haven't done a Weekly Geeks post for quite awhile! This week's topic:


Share with us a podcast you love, preferably book related, but not necessarily so. Give us the link, of course, and share with us details about that podcast and why you enjoy it so much. If you have a couple or three favorites, share them all!

I used to listen to podcasts a lot more when I was working - often to drown out the noise of downtown construction or of chatty co-workers. The ones I listened to most are not necessarily book-related, but authors are often interviewed and it sometimes piqued my interest about their books. These are all such high quality shows and the podcasts are all quite reliable (not all programs are!)

  • Fresh Air with Terry Gross. I'm so glad this is a podcast because I rarely remember to tune in when it's on the radio. Terry is a fabulous interviewer and her guests cover a very wide spectrum, from authors to generals to actors.
  • Speaking of Faith with Krista Tippet - this is where I heard Matt Sanford interviewed about his book, Waking, that I reviewed last week. She has very thought provoking shows with guests such as Karen Armstrong, Rachel Naomi Remen, the late poet John O'Donohue and Mary Doria Russell.
  • The Story with Dick Gordon. Wonderful interviews with everyday folk who have interesting stories to tell.
  • This American Life with Ira Glass. Just brilliant. Sometimes funny, often poignant. David Sedaris is a regular guest as is Sarah Vowell. Hint: you need to download this one the week immediately following the airing of the show for the free podcast; after that they're available for 99 cents each (still a good deal).
I'm grateful for this theme this week because now I'm remembering how much I enjoyed listening to these shows while I worked or rode the bus. I must make time for them again.
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Weekly Geeks 2009-26: Globe Trotting

This week's Weekly Geeks asks you to tell us about your globe trotting via books. Are you a global reader? How many countries have you "visited" in your reading? What are your favorite places or cultures to read about? Can you recommend particularly good books about certain regions, countries or continents? How do you find out about books from other countries? What countries would you like to read that you haven't yet?

This was my own WG topic, so I guess I'd better get a post up about it! I've enjoyed reading books from other countries/cultures for a number of years but haven't been conscientious about it until the last couple of years, since I've been on Library Thing. There I find lots of interesting discussions about books from around the world, ones I probably wouldn't have heard of otherwise. One of the forums on LT is Reading Globally - I get a lot of good book recommendations there.

So, where have I been? I tend to read a lot of Asian lit, particularly Chinese and Japanese authors. There's a spareness about the writing that I love. Gail Tsukyama is one of my favorite Japanese writers.

South America is another favorite place to visit - Isabelle Allende, from Chile, is one of my very favorite authors and I will read anything she writes!

I've read quite a few books by African writers lately -- Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie wrote the Orange Prize winner Half of a Yellow Sun, which is a stunning book about the Biafran civil war, of which I was completely ignorant.

Most of the books I read from other countries are heavy on cultural and/or political themes, so as well as reading some fresh new writing, I also learn a great deal about other places in the world. It feels expansive and is a much easier way for me to learn about a place than reading history books. And since I know I won't be traveling to most of these places, I get to "visit" them via writers who've lived the experience.

Where have I been? This map gives you a fairly good idea:




55 countries, or 24% of the total. I can see I need to fill in a lot of blanks in Africa, the Middle East and, surprisingly, Europe - Austria, The Netherlands, Portugal, Switzerland, and many of the eastern European countries. I have a few on my list - do you have some recommendations for me? Venezuela -- Morocco -- Romania -- Croatia -- Kuwait -- Saudi Arabia?

Visit Weekly Geeks to find out where in the world other readers have been.
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Weekly Geeks 2009-24: Trivia!

Suey hosted WG this week and invited us to play trivia games of our choice (with a literary focus, of course).

I drew on one of my favorites from last year -- below you'll find seven partial book covers (all are well known books). All you have to do is come up with the titles and put your answers into a comment. Have fun!




1.


2.


3.


4.


5.


6.


7.
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Weekly Geeks 2009-23: Reading Challenges



This week's Weekly Geeks topic was suggested by Sheri of A Novel Menagerie. She writes:



Reading Challenges: a help or a hurt? Do you find that the reading challenges keep you organized and goal-oriented? Or, do you find that as you near the end of a challenge that you've failed because you fell short of your original goals? As a result of some reading challenges, I've picked up books that I would have otherwise never heard of or picked up; that, frankly, I have loved. Have you experienced the same with challenges? If so, which ones? Do you have favorite reading challenges?
This is the first time I've attempted reading challenges other than the 100 books a year or the perpetual Booker and Orange awards challenges the last couple of years. I had mixed feelings about starting in on a bunch of challenges - would it take away the enjoyment of reading? Would it feel too much like being back in school, when I never got to choose what I wanted to read?

But then a couple of them really sparked my interest - especially What's In A Name? This challenge has a list of categories, such as "a book with a building in the title; a book with a medical condition in the title." The categories change every year. I found this one easy and most of the books I chose were already on my TBR shelves. It was fun to match titles with categories. I finished this one (6 books) by mid-February.

I also enjoyed the challenge to read five books that Dewey (the originator of Weekly Geeks) had read and reviewed. We had pretty similar tastes in books, so it was easy for me to find five that I could enjoy and probably would have read anyway.

I can't say that the challenges are introducing me to many books I wouldn't have read; that's a bigger picture for me -- book blogs and Library Thing have been the motherlode of new authors for me in the last two years.

I usually save this for the last Sunday Salon of the month, but this is a good time to do an update on my reading challenges.

What's in a Name: completed 6/6 DONE!
Decades Challenge (one book from each decade of the 20th century): completed 6/10.
The Orange Prize and Booker Prize challenges are perpetual, but I've set a personal goal to read 12 of each this year (some are crossovers). Orange Prize: 11/12; Booker Prize: 7/12. With Orange July just next month, I'll be able to knock that one off easily! I already have seven books chosen for that month.
Dewey's Books: 5/5 DONE!
Pub Challenge (reading books published in 2009): 8/9
Short Stories: 21/25
Essays: 0/20
Jane Austen: 0/1
Classics (other than Austen): 4/4 DONE!
These last two are personal challenges. By my definition, Classic is any book older than me that has a high level of notoriety. There are a few exceptions (e.g. To Kill A Mockingbird).

I'm doing pretty well on these! The one I'm running behind on is my 125 book challenge - at the midway point, I've read 47 books. So I might just make it to 100 unless I blog less and read more!

And no, I don't feel like a failure if I don't meet my goals. They are just goals, not requirements.
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Daily Quote 03-13-09

Here is today's quote for the Weekly Geeks week of quotes:






For most of history, Anonymous was a woman. ~Virginia Woolf
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Daily Quote 03-12-09

Here is today's quote for the Weekly Geeks week of quotes:


I've yet to be on a campus where most women weren't worrying about some aspect of combining marriage, children, and a career. I've yet to find one where many men were worrying about the same thing. ~Gloria Steinem


Learn more about Gloria Steinem

Only one day left until the drawing for my book giveaway. Sign up by Friday morning!

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Daily Quote 03-11-09

Here is today's quote for the Weekly Geeks week of quotes:



You know, when I first went into the movies Lionel Barrymore played my grandfather. Later he played my father and finally he played my husband. If he had lived I'm sure I would have played his mother. That's the way it is in Hollywood. The men get younger and the women get older. ~Lillian Gish

Find out more about Lillian Gish.


Only two days left until the drawing for my book giveaway. Sign up by Friday morning!

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Daily Quote 03-10-09

Here is today's quote for the Weekly Geeks week of quotes:

Men are taught to apologize for their weaknesses, women for their strengths. ~Lois Wyse



I hadn't heard of Lois Wyse before. Here's some information about her.

Only a few days left until the drawing for my book giveaway. Sign up by Friday morning! Read More!

Daily Quote 03-09-09

Here is today's quote for the Weekly Geeks week of quotes:



It was we, the people; not we, the white male citizens; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the Union.... Men, their rights and nothing more; women, their rights and nothing less.
~Susan B. Anthony

Learn more about Susan B. Anthony here.


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Daily Quote 03-08-09

Happy International Women's Day! Here is today's quote for the Weekly Geeks week of quotes:


Taught from infancy that beauty is woman's sceptre, the mind shapes itself to the body, and roaming round its gilt cage, only seeks to adorn its prison. ~Mary Wollstonecraft


Mary Wollstonecraft was an early advocate for women's rights. In 1792 she wrote Vindication for the Right of Women which became an iconic treatise for the feminist movement. She died giving birth to Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, most well known as the author of Frankenstein.

Read more about Mary Wollstonecraft here.


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Weekly Geeks 2009-09: A Quote a Day


One of my favorite Weekly Geeks last year was: A Quote a Day. This will have you pulling books off your shelves and Googling for your favorites. It also means a post a day for the next week - or as many as you can do.


You may want to come up with a theme, such as favorite passages from books, author quotes, political quotes, quotes about books or reading, humorous quotes, whatever. Or you may not want a theme at all; maybe you just want to gather up seven assorted quotes that appeal to you. You may want to start each of your posts of the week with a quote, or you may want to give quotes posts of their own in addition to your regular posts. It’s all up to you!
I originally thought I'd use garden quotes as my theme since it's time to start seriously thinking garden. But then I remembered that tomorrow is International Women's Day and March is Women's History Month (isn't it odd that we have to devote a month to it? Why can't it just be women's history every day?) So I'm scouting out my favorite quotes by and about women.


I myself have never been able to find out precisely what feminism is: I only know that people call me a feminist whenever I express sentiments that differentiate me from a door mat or a prostitute.
~Rebecca West, "Mr Chesterton in Hysterics: A Study in Prejudice," The Clarion, 14 Nov 1913, reprinted in The Young Rebecca, 1982. Learn more about Rebecca West.

See what other Weekly Geeks come up with this week.

And be sure to check out my book giveaway in celebration of my one year blogiversary.

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Weekly Geeks 2009-05: Judging Books by Covers

I had every intention of doing WG last week which was all about our passions other than books and blogging. You know what they say about intentions. Anyway, I think I got those mostly covered in other posts this week, between the interview and the letter E.

This week Becky asked us to "Pick a book--any book, really--and search out multiple book cover images for that book. They could span a decade or two (or more)...Or they could span several countries. Which cover is your favorite? Which one is your least favorite? Which one best 'captures' what the book is about?"

I picked The Secret Life of Bees. I was amazed at how many different covers were published for a book that's less than ten years old. Of course, many of them are in different languages, but somehow I don't expect there to be such a variety. Here's a sample:

**I have no idea why the table starts way down the page. Think of it as anticipation. Wait for it....





















1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12

13


I'd have to go with #3, because that's the one I read and I'm most familiar with. And there's a simplicity to it that I love. Cover #12 is cute, but it seems like they're trying to tell the story on the cover with pictures, and it's a bit too much. I'm not particularly fond of book covers that try to render a picture of the characters; I find I like to imagine them myself.

And I'm really not fond of book covers with movie tie-ins. Though I've heard good things about this movie, it's not the same as the book EVER. I feel like I'm buying an advertisement for the movie whenever I acquire one of those and I resent that. If given a choice, I always pick the one that is NOT the movie stars on the cover.

See what other Weekly Geeks came up with. Thanks Becky for a fun Geek assignment!
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Weekly Geeks 2009-03: The Classics

There are four parts to this installment of Weekly Geeks.

Part the first:

How do you feel about classic literature? Are you intimidated by it? Love it? Not sure because you never actually tried it? Don't get why anyone reads anything else? Which classics, if any, have you truly loved? Which would you recommend for someone who has very little experience reading older books? Go all out, sell us on it!

I feel pretty inadequate about classic lit, considering I have a BA in English. I've read very little Shakespeare; a few Dickens; only one Jane Austen so far; no Balzac, Byron, Blake or Burns. I don't feel intimidated by it anymore, but I can't say it's my favorite genre. I usually read it because I think I should, not because I enjoy it. To me it's a bit like learning music theory and getting a good base of classical music before journeying off into other styles.

Last year I read War and Peace and Anna Karenina. I enjoyed the latter immensely and had a love/hate relationship with the former. I'm really glad I read them and it got me over feeling intimidated. I also learned a lot. I'm planning to read more Russian lit in the next year.


Recommendations for Classics 101? Dickens - David Copperfield or Great Expectations; Twain - Huck Finn; Willa Cather - My Antonia; Bronte, C - Jane Eyre; Homer - The Odyssey.

Part the second:

A challenge, should you choose to accept it: Read at least one chapter of a classic novel, preferably by an author you're not familiar with.


I was going to read a bit of Madame Bovary but it's after 1 a.m. and I think I'll take a pass on that for now. Perhaps I'll come back later with a mini-review.

Part the third:

Let's say you're vacationing with your dear cousin Myrtle, and she forgot to bring a book. The two of you venture into the hip independent bookstore around the corner, where she primly announces that she only reads classic literature. If you don't find her a book, she'll never let you get any reading done! What contemporary book/s with classic appeal would you pull off the shelf for her?

I would argue that there are classics younger than 100 years: anything Steinbeck; To Kill a Mockingbird, Beloved.

But let's say this bookstore only carries books published in the last 25 years. "Cousin Myrtle, I think you'd like The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende. Yes, it's about South America, it's translated from Spanish....no? OK, what about one of these?" (I show her The Poisonwood Bible and A Prayer for Owen Meany, hoping the religious references will appease her). "Here's one - The Hours. It's based on Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway, sort of a re-telling. Yes? Great, I think you'll love it. And this one too - The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro." She'll be impressed by the English manners. (Now that cousin Myrtle is out of my hair, I'm going to curl up with The Handmaid's Tale, definitely a classic, but one Myrtle wouldn't appreciate.)

Part the fourth:

As you explore the other Weekly Geeks posts: Did any inspire you to want to read a book you've never read before—or reread one to give it another chance? Tell us all about it, including a link to the post or posts that sparked your interest. If you end up reading the book, be sure to include a link to your post about it in a future Weekly Geeks post!


Three blogs I visited mentioned Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray:
Stephanie at Confessions of a Bookaholic; Jackie at Literary Escapism and marineko at dreaming out loud. I've never read it. Mary Shelley's Frankenstein is one I keep thinking about reading and two of these bloggers mentioned it. So, I guess I know what two books will be going on my TBR pile!

Thanks to Ali for hosting Weekly Geeks this week. Great questions!
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Weekly Geeks 2009-02: Being a WG


This week an unfinished person posted our Weekly Geeks assignment, thanks, uh, person! Joanne put forth the question:
For those who have been with the group, either from the start or joined within recent months, what does being a member mean to you? What do you enjoy about the group? What are some of your more memorable Weekly Geeks that we might could do again? What could be improved as we continue the legacy that Dewey gave us?
I'd been blogging for a couple of months before I actually posted my first WG entry, though I'd followed the meme every week. The ideas were almost always interesting and fun, creative, community-oriented or educational. And so I kept coming back every week. There were only a couple that didn't interest me - one was a scavenger hunt that looked like it would take all week to do! I loved the weeks when we intentionally "met" other bloggers, for interviews or comparisons. I've gotten to know a lot of wonderful people through Weekly Geeks and that's what keeps me coming back.

What I love about being a "member" of this amazing group is that anyone can join at any time, and there are no expectations. And it's fun and interesting.
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Weekly Geeks 2009-01


Well, we're back at last, and Dewey's spirit lives on in every Weekly Geek post. I had the honor and pleasure of posting the first assignment for the return of WG. And I've been so busy visiting everyone's posts this morning, I haven't even finished mine!

Our assignment this week:

In the spirit of the amazing community building that Dewey was so good at, tell us about your favorite blogs, the ones you have bookmarked or subscribe to in your Google Reader, that you visit on a regular basis. Tell us what it is about these blogs that you love, that inspire or educate you or make you laugh. Be sure to link to them so we can find them too.
Some days I make myself crazy trying to keep up with all the blogs I want to visit. Thank goodness for retirement! and for Google Reader which manages all my favorite blogs and lets me know when new goodies are posted. To think a year ago, I hardly knew what a blog was!

I have several categories of blogs I follow; for this post, I'm limiting myself to three in each category, which is really hard to do.

Book blogs:
  • books i done read - Raych writes the funniest reviews on the planet. I hope she wills me her sense of humor. She is so irreverent - a quality I admire in a person!
  • Tripping Toward Lucidity - Andi was one of the first book bloggers I connected with. She's also very funny and thoughtful, writes great reviews and shares her daily life with us, the good, the bad and the ugly! She's also busy with a few other blogs and an online 'zine. Not to mention teaching and going to school. Sheesh.
  • Cornflower lives in Edinburgh and has quite a following. She recently separated her book blog from her "other" which has fantastic photos, textiles, recipes and food photos that will make you drool puddles. This link is to her book blog where she runs a monthly book group and writes fantastic reviews. Also hosts a lot of giveaways.

Photo blogs:

I've recently become addicted to photography and there are some wonderful blogs and memes out there (my photo blog is now separate from this one). Here are some of my favs:
  • Lisa's Chaos - Lisa and her husband are professional photographers and their work is stunning. Very creative and fun stories, too. Lisa hosts one of my favorite photo memes, Macro Monday. I love macro photography!
  • Spatter - what can I say. Awesome photos. Interesting stories. June travels a lot, so there's a great diversity to her photography.
  • Heaven in Belgium - Jientje has a lot of fun with her camera and shares tips with us. She's very creative in her photo setups and is, well, just a nice person.
Other - writing, politics, whatever:

I think what has astounded me most about the blog world is how people are writing their everyday stories in such creative ways. Whether it's about raising children, moving to a new town, the '08 election or just pondering, this is definitely a new way of finding community and sharing our stories, which is a good start down a road to peace. It's such a wonderful way of connecting and finding similarities and learning about differences. Some of my favorites in this category are:
  • Diane's Addled Ramblings - this woman is funny!!! She writes about being a single mom, about writing, politics, dating - all with a style that keeps me wanting MORE.
  • i am saved by the buoyancy of citrus - this is Raych again, her non-book blog. Again, funny! Everyday. Someday I will ask her where she got such a quirky blog name.
  • So Not Zen - I recently discovered this blog; another very funny writer about the everyday, the joys and woes of parenting. She's doing a daily gratitude post. She also lives just across the Columbia River from me. And I love the name of her blog. And this bit in her "about me" cracks me up: I want to think like Buddha, not look like him.
Can you tell I appreciate humorous blogs?

Well that ought to keep you all busy for awhile! Now I'm off to see who else has posted to Weekly Geeks. I will have to pry the laptop off my hot thighs by the end of this day. No, not HOT as in buff - HOT as in this laptop is now the temperature of a waffle iron.

Visit the new home of Weekly Geeks and see what others are geeking about.
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Weekly Geeks #26 - Strolling through the bloggerhood


Dewey's assignment this week is to visit five other blogs - of bloggers we don't know - and find some things in common with them. At first this SO reminded me of those uncomfortable "ice breakers" I've endured at countless meetings and workshops. But it was quite fun and I wasn't forced to talk to anyone!

  • My first stop was at Ali's blog, Worducopia . Ali had just posted a meme, 4 Things, and I saw we had some things in common:
    • We've both lived in Portland
    • We both love Harold and Maude
    • We've both vacationed in the San Juan Islands
    • We both visit LibraryThing often

  • Next I visited Kim at Sophisticated Dorkiness. What I noticed here was our similar blogging style: we both incorporate a lot of photos, cartoons and book covers. We also read a lot of the same books.
  • Reading in Appalachia was my next stop. This is Icedream's blog. Her review of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society could have been written by me!
  • Then I knocked on Book Dads' door. I didn't find a lot we had in common, but I really liked his WG Gift Books for Dads post last week. It's so very inclusive of all kinds of families. And I appreciate that he promotes positive images of fatherhood through books and blogging.
Thanks, Dewey - even though I grumble when those icebreakers come up, I usually end up enjoying them.

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Weekly Geeks #24 - Favorite Author: Isabel Allende


Dewey's assignment this week is to choose a writer that we like and share some interesting information about him/her.


I've been an Isabel Allende fan for many years and have read all her books (except her YA novels and the most recent memoir). Her writing style is so colorful, laced with magical realism and characters that come alive on the page.

I love what Isabel says on her website:
It is very strange to write one's biography because it is just a list of dates, events, and achievements. In reality the most important things about one's life happen in the secret chambers of the heart and cannot be included in a list like this. I think that my most significant achievement is not my writing, but the love I share with my family and the ways in which I have tried to help others.
She was born in Chile in 1942; her uncle, Salvadore Allende, was president of Chile from 1970-73. He was killed in a coup d'état. Pinochet's subsequent military rule has informed much of Isabel's writing; because of her family ties to President Allende, she was forced to flee Chile.

Allende started her writing career as a journalist in Chile and then in Venezuela. Her first and probably most famous book, The House of the Spirits, began as a letter to her dying grandfather. According to Wikipedia, "the intent of this work was to exorcise the ghosts of the Pinochet dictatorship."

Allende has written eight novels, three YA novels, a collection of short stories, and several memoirs and nonfiction works. She is the recipient of a long list of honors, awards and honorary degrees, including the CommonWealth Award of Distinguished Service for Literature and the Feminist of the Year Award from The Feminist Majority Foundation.

Interesting tidbit: Allende starts all her books on January 8th, a day she considers lucky and sacred.

Isabel Allende


From her website:
Q. How does inspiration work?

A. I spend ten, twelve hours a day alone in a room writing. I don't talk to anybody; I don't answer the telephone. I'm just a medium or an instrument of something that is happening beyond me, voices that talk through me. I'm creating a world that is fiction but that doesn't belong to me. I'm not God; I'm just an instrument. And in that long, very patient daily exercise of writing I have discovered a lot about myself and about life. I have learned. I'm not conscious of what I'm writing. It's a strange process; as if by this lying-in-fiction you discover little things that are true about yourself, about life, about people, about how the world works.
Be sure to check out Chris's post about George Eliot. Interesting stuff!

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Weekly Geeks #23 - Blogger's Choice

From Dewey:
This week, every participant gets to choose one of the previous Weekly Geeks themes to repeat. I think it’ll be a lot of fun seeing what everyone chooses. It’ll give me an idea of what the most popular themes have been, and it’ll give everyone else a break from seeing almost identical posts on the blog of all the WG participants. And of course it gives you the flexibility of choice.

I chose Weekly Geeks #4: "Choose a political or social issue that matters to you. Find several books addressing that issue; they don’t have to books you’ve read, just books you might like to read." Blog blog blog.

Well. I guess you know by now the election is a couple days away. And I think, if you've read any of my blog, you know how I feel about the outgoing administration. So I won't belabor it. I've spent a lot of my reading time the last eight years on anti-Bush, anti-imperialist, anti-war tomes and some of it is pretty bleak stuff. I got so burned out on it that after awhile I quit reading nonfiction altogether.

There are a few books, though, that have a more hopeful tone and these are the ones I'll focus on here. I find them more useful than the Hell-in-a-Handbasket books - which is an actual title of a very funny Tom Tomorrow book. And, after all, it is important to laugh about the total destruction of our democracy, economy and reputation in the world.

But I digress. The books I've found most helpful in the last several years are:

  • Hope in the Dark: Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities by Rebecca Solnit - a pep talk for activists. Stories and anecdotes for AAA (Activists' Attitude Adjustment). The very first story in this book gave me a boost when I was having doubts about my effectiveness as an activist. Solnit is a wonderful writer who shows up in all sorts of publications, including Orion magazine, The Nation, Harpers and on AlterNet.
  • The Impossible Will Take a Little While edited by Paul Rogat Loeb. This is a fabulous collection of stories and poetry. Contributors include Howard Zinn, Nelson Mandela, Arundhati Roy, Joanna Macy, Alice Walker. Truly inspiring.

  • How to Stop the Next War Now: Effective Responses to Violence and Terrorism edited by Medea Benjamin and Jodie Evans, co-founders of Code Pink. I'm a founding member of Portland's Code Pink. We've done some pretty crazy actions over the last 5 years, including a mock arrest of Karl Rove; a Mother's Day parade where we marched through downtown with shopping carts filled with "bombs" and handed out receipts to passersby detailing how much the Iraq invasion had cost per month up to that point; and inserting ourselves into the annual Portland Rose Parade as the Peace Fleet.

    This book is filled with much needed inspiration and some practical information on how to keep the peace movement alive and well.

My greatest hope is that, after Tuesday, we will be witness to - and active participants in - the turning of the tide; that our country will turn from the ill-fated destructive path it's on and, with new leadership, move forward into a peaceful and sustainable future.

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